In the old days one had no choice - whatever was on the radio was what you heard, and it was very difficult to hear the whole CD/tape/ancient-media. I used to have a 3-4 song rule - if I didn't like 3-4 songs on the album I wouldn't buy it. It was very hard to adhere to, and breaking the rule almost always resulted in disappointment.
MP3 changed that, but not because of pirating - because listeners could start sampling the whole product to see if they wanted to buy it. Tech improvements keep making that easier. Bands will have to work harder to produce quality work for their fans (including having a good handle on what 'quality' and 'fans' means for them), instead of producing one good song and ten fillers and calling it an album.
At my first SA job someone was using the database for some cargo-cult manipulation and sorting - it took eight hours. I rewrote it in a few lines of perl, and it took 17 seconds - 12 after removing the debugging print statements :-)
In the old days one had no choice - whatever was on the radio was what you heard, and it was very difficult to hear the whole CD/tape/ancient-media. I used to have a 3-4 song rule - if I didn't like 3-4 songs on the album I wouldn't buy it. It was very hard to adhere to, and breaking the rule almost always resulted in disappointment.
MP3 changed that, but not because of pirating - because listeners could start sampling the whole product to see if they wanted to buy it. Tech improvements keep making that easier. Bands will have to work harder to produce quality work for their fans (including having a good handle on what 'quality' and 'fans' means for them), instead of producing one good song and ten fillers and calling it an album.